The Conservative Proposal To Take Money from Poor Single Moms and Give It to Married Couples

There is a video at the site linked.  How ever as you read through this remember that this is the group that wrote project 2025 and the main author of that Christian nationalist screed is Russell Vought who has a powerful position in the tRump administration.  This is entirely about pushing a fundamentalist Christian lifestyle and worldview on the US public with heavy emphasis on quiverful which ishave as many children as possible for Christian families most of whom in that movement lived impoverished on one income.  The idea is more kids butts in church pews now leads to more adult butts in those pews increasing tithes and money in the collection plates.  Church attendance has decreased steadily and this is designed to increase it again.   Plus it removes rights for women and LGBTQ+ families.   The parents get the money only if women / the mothers marry young, forgo an advanced education, stay out of the work place, and have child after child after child like a breeding stock farm animal.  It is only for the “right or correct types of families” and harms those who are not the “right” kinds of families.  Plus it is totally racist with the poor people being cut out of the funds.  The fact is minorities make on average far less than white families due to inherent racism and CRT, which is a real thing.  Hugs


https://www.throughline.news/p/the-conservative-proposal-to-take

The Heritage Foundation has an idea: Take from the poor and give to the rich

7 thoughts on “The Conservative Proposal To Take Money from Poor Single Moms and Give It to Married Couples

  1. See? It isn’t only LGBTQ+. It’s all women, and all poor people who use the safety net.

    If there was universal basic income, none of this would be a problem. At the least, to follow their lines of thinking, there should be income for new mothers (no matter how many babies,) and the born children. Their actual purpose is obvious by the omission of this.

    There is plenty for everybody, if some were not so greedy and afraid of what they’ve built being greedy.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Hi Ali. Well said. I have long been a supporter of UBI since the 1980s. If done properly it would save so many people from being homeless or going hungry. They amount has to be enough for a quaility liffe and work will give an increased wealth for those who can or wish to work. The fact is the US lost 92,000 jobs in January. The fact is with the current economy which is the movement of money at the lower level of the public by people buying products which requires people to sell products and more people to create the products. But the issue is two fold, there is no money in the lower levels / lower incomes to buy anything and the US has almost a completely service economy and we buy built products from other countries. So the fact that has been known since the 1980s is that there will simply not be enough jobs for all the people and at the current levels of income, not enough money movement. But UBI removes one of the things the wealthy really want, a desperate workforce who will take any job at any low wage in any unsafe condition being afraid to complain or try to change to a better job.

      One last thing Ali I just do not understand and maybe you could help me understand it both as you are a woman and you were raised in a rather strict religion. What is with all the misogyny? Why the desperate need to keep women dependent on men, keep women out of the workforce, keep women as breeding stock, and keep women as second / third class people who function as house cleaners, home keepers, child nannies, and servants of men while serving males base needs? Hugs

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      1. I cannot answer your question, precisely. While I know what I wrote about the denomination in which I was raised sounded strict, and in many ways it is, it isn’t strict as to personal behavior/responsibility, nor was it very misogynist. For generations, no questions were ever asked, as to why women couldn’t give the epistle, or why girls couldn’t be candlelighters, etc. My confirmation class asked those questions, and my sister (2 yr. younger than I) did both during her confirmation year, so you see things were changing. Compared to what the fundamentalist so-called evangelistic churches, we were a liberal denomination. When I was young, I got a bad impression of Paul, who did make misogynist comments in his letters, though when read as a whole, not so much. Still, the people who put the Bible together, well. History is written by the victors, and men who were supposed to be celibate were the ones who put that all together. When I was young growing up, remember, it was the 60s and early 70s, and questions were only beginning to be asked, which led to various decisions and spaces for women. But women were already teachers and principals of our parochial schools then, as well as the public schools which I attended.

        As an example, I recall a question in Sunday School class about getting pain relief during labor and birth. A friend’s mom was looking into what was then new, having had a couple of quite miserable labors/deliveries, and difficult recoveries. Her husband wanted her to talk to Pastor about it, because of what God said as he sent Adam and Eve out of Eden. Most of the women teachers already taught that that was not specific, and that women have plenty of pain during pregnancy (true,) labor, delivery, and the lifetime of the child (all true,) so they felt that if God gave the grace to scientists to know how to safely relieve labor pain, and women wanted to use it, it was a gift. (The men teachers tended to say it was between the husband and wife.😄) Then, some women who were married with children already worked, though they had jobs, not careers, though that evolved during those years into the early 80s when the Moral Majority got scared of us. So, it was during that change, where women seriously went to college to learn to get themselves where the men were, that I was a member of that church. It wasn’t so bad. Later, in the mid-80s, LCMS did come out as anti-choice, and I think I remember seeing they came out as in favor of GW’s wars. (As opposed to being render-unto-Caesar about such things because we had the draft and it was the law, but not ever in favor of war and killing. If approached, pastors would assist men with legal conscientious objection.)

        Now the fundamentalist churches seemed as if they’d always been misogynist, and never have given it up. I can’t explain it without feeling judgmental though I believe (don’t know) it’s about power over others. I’ve not read the Bible in full in a few years, but I used to do it every year, and never saw the lack of respect and belittling of women in the Bible that we see from those churches. People can cherry-pick it, of course, but that’s not fair.

        There’s a lot of technical stuff that people can get from catechisms (we used those in our studies,) or other religious writings by people who studied the original stuff, as well as other writings surrounding the Biblical writings, that can give people a better interpretation of their Bibles. But simply put, God created Eve just as he created Adam, so she’s His daughter with His face, same as Adam, same as every other human. We should all be respected as fellow humans, which is what the Big 10 command. As well as the 2 most important commandments Jesus taught; love God with all our hearts, minds, and souls, and Love Our Neighbors As Ourselves. No exceptions; everyone is our neighbor.

        That got long. I hope no one thinks I’m trying to convince anyone of anything; I’m only trying to answer the question about churches teaching misogyny, from my own experience. And thanks for asking, Scottie!

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Hi Ali. Thanks for the answer I enjoyed reading it. At one point you wrote it’s about power over others. I think you are correct. I have had a feeling that was the root of a lot of fundamentalist / evangelical Christian nationalist rhetoric and dogma. Controling how everyone lives to please their version of god. But I find misogyny as mystifying as thinking a person with darker skin is some how inferior because of it. I just have never felt that way and struggle to understand how / why some people think that way. Hugs

          Liked by 1 person

    1. Yeah, it’s the current federal tax and safety net systems on steroids. Like the top doesn’t already steal plenty from those less well off. That line ought to be getting closer to some of these legislators, though. They aren’t all billionaires. I know many of them are worth plenty, but the ones above them are going to be coming for the next-down level if things continue. They’ve about broken the entire middle class already.

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    2. Hi Judy. I agree that this will cause women to be abused. It creates a lesser class of people who as I replied to Ali: Why the desperate need to keep women dependent on men, keep women out of the workforce, keep women as breeding stock, and keep women as second / third class people who function as house cleaners, home keepers, child nannies, and servants of men while serving males base needs. I remember hearing stories of women in the 1930s / 1960s stories of women being denied money for groceries or their needs while men spent their money on things that pleased them, men who assaulted women for not serving them well enough such as having dinner late or failing to be subservient enough. Stories of sexual harassment and assault for the few women who were able to get into the workforce and the constant threats of rape leading to a pregnancy that trying to end could kill them. Why would any person want to go back to those times and what kind of person glorifies and claims they were superior to equality? I really do not understand that mind set. Hugs

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